Description
The authors in this volume take up topics and time periods that include Native history, the US-Canada and US-Mexico borders, regions from Texas to Alaska and Montana to California, and a chronology that stretches from the mid-nineteenth century to the near-present. From water rights to women's rights, from immigrant to indigenous histories, from disputes over coal deposits to child custody, their essays chronicle the ways in which marginalized westerners have leveraged and resisted the law to define their own rights and legacies. For the authors, legal borderlands might be the legal texts that define and regulate geopolitical borders, or they might be the ambiguities or contradictions creating liminal zones within the law. In their essays, and in the volume as a whole, the concept of legal borderlands proves a remarkably useful framework for finally bringing a measure of clarity to a region characterized by lawful disorder and contradiction.
About the Author
Katrina Jagodinsky is associate professor of history at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. She is the author of Legal Codes and Talking Trees: Indigenous Women's Sovereignty in the Sonoran and Puget Sound Borderlands, 1854-1946.
Pablo Mitchell is professor of history at Oberlin College. He is the author of Coyote Nation: Sexuality, Race, and Conquest in Modernizing New Mexico, 1880-1920, which won the Organization of American Historians' Ray Allen Billington Prize in 2007.
Reviews
This rich and eclectic collection of writings by scholars of Native American, African American, Chicana/o, and Latina/o history as well as border and legal studies represents the death knell to the archetype of the 'wild west.' Rather than the North American West being a lawless region, Beyond the Borders of the Law demonstrates the varied origins, uses, and interpretations of the law in there and the ways in which even the most disenfranchised peoples used the legal system to advocate for their rights and personal freedoms. Focusing on themes of race and gender, property and citizenship, and justice and reform, the volume delves deeply and widely into the law's influence in the borderlands across space, place, and time."" - Miroslava Chavez-Garcia, author of Migrant Longing: Letter Writing across the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands
""Western legal history is relatively new, and this creative collection of essays defines the field. Within the broad topic of legal borderlands, ten authors offer their engaging ideas about race and gender, property and citizenship, and justice and reform of the law in the American West. This book is most worthy of being described as 'cutting edge."" - John R. Wunder, author of "Retained by The People": A History of American Indians and the Bill of Rights
Book Information
ISBN 9780700626793
Author Katrina Jagodinsky
Format Paperback
Page Count 368
Imprint University Press of Kansas
Publisher University Press of Kansas
Weight(grams) 535g
Dimensions(mm) 226mm * 152mm * 25mm